Here we discuss sex and politics, loudly, no apologies hence "screeds" and "attitude."

2/24/2016

trapper john m.d.

afraid there are no more pointless t.v. shows to turn into films?

time to go with 'trapper john m.d.'

1 of the all time boring shows.

for a plot you have some medical emergency: susan sarandon is prepared to have her tonsils taken out when trapper discovers that she also has an issue with a balloon in her belly - containing drugs from a trip to mexico where she was unknowingly used as a drug mule.

antonio banderas co-stars as the mexican drug runner determined to get the drugs back even if he has to kill susan and trapper.

trapper is played by russell crowe so he can deliver a lot of sanctimonious speeches.

kellen lutz has the gregory harrison role which means he mainly walks around in briefs or is caught in the shower.

"Hillary, regarding your Iraq War vote-" "Sorry to stop you there Larry, but where is the original Perfume video?"

246 retweets325 likes

Of course, when forced to comment, Hillary calls her vote for the Iraq War a "mistake." To that,Ben Tanosborn (RUSSIA INSIDER) offers:Time and time again we, Americans, keep referring to the invasion of
Iraq in 2003 as a mistake; almost in unanimity: Democrats and
Republicans. But it was not a mistake, not by a long shot! It was a
calculated, belligerent act by a government clique of elitist war-hawks,
Bush-Junior and Dick Cheney at the top of the criminal heap.
Fortunately for these American leaders, and unfortunately for the rest
of us, only leaders from nations vanquished are indicted and go to
trial. If the Axis had prevailed in World War II, and we were living in
Hitler’s Millennium, there would not have been those Nuremberg Trials
(1945-9), or the subsequent enactment of important, critical
international law, such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
(1948), or the Geneva Convention (1949). No, no gallows for Bush and
Cheney… only admiration from fools![. . .]Yes; Hillary Rodham Clinton, former First Lady, Senator and Secretary of
State constantly invokes her extensive experience in affairs of state
as strongly qualifying her for the White House; yet her vast experience
follows for the most part decisions with bad judgment… bad experience
which in my book is counterproductive to that required from a
prospective good and effective leader.

Meanwhile, Paul Rosenberg (SALON) takes
Cranky Clinton to task for the sliming she and her supporters are
giving her rival US Senator Bernie Sanders who stood against the war:

But we’ve also seen a predictable Clinton
emphasis on foreign policy, taking aim at Sanders’ comparatively meager
record—as we saw in the PBS debate in Milwaukee [transcript]—and
trying to portray it as utterly disqualifying, rather than as yet
another reflection of a profound elite/mass divide, symbolized by their
starkly different views of elite elder statesman Henry Kissinger.

The
fact that this is now seen as a soft, risky or fringe position by many
in the establishment simply goes to show how badly the establishment has
lost its way, on foreign policy, every bit as much as on domestic
issues.

Sanctions had already harmed Iraq before the start of the current war
(March 2003). The illegal war resulted in the deaths of over one
million Iraqis.

As appalling as that figure is, the dead aren't coming back.

And the living?

They not only mourn, they have to live with and in the system the US created.

That's a government largely ruled by Shi'ites who fled Iraq like cowards
before the US-led invasion of 2003. In exile, they nursed their hatred
and suckled on their fear. When they re-merged in Iraq and were placed
in positions of power, they misused their positions to fuel hatred.

And did we note how corrupt they are?

Last week, MEM reported,
"Iraq’s Commission of Public Integrity referred on Thursday four former
senior officials to court on charges of corruption. The Commission
said in a statement released on Thursday that it had
referred to court two former deputies of Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi,
the former director of former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s military
office and Baghdad’s former
mayor."

Nouri al-Maliki became a very rich man while prime minister (2006 -
2014) and was able to secure a fleet of sports cars and pricey digs
(such as the one in London) for his idiot son.

The bulk of the Iraqi people live in or near poverty.

This despite the fact that the country has approximately 30 million citizens and brings in billions each year via oil.

Now, with plunging oil prices leaving Iraq’s revenues in more
jeopardy than at any time since the US invasion, attention is shifting
to what the custodians of public funds have done over more than a decade
with tens of billions of dollars that could otherwise be a buffer from
such a budget shock.If, as projected, global oil prices remain at historic lows, Iraq
will be unable to pay some of its civil servants, or honour pledges to
build roads and power stations in the next financial year. The gravity
of the crisis has created uncomfortable reckonings for Iraq’s political
class, military leaders and some senior religious figures, who have led a
staggering 13-year pillage that has left Iraq consistently rated as one
of the top five least transparent and most corrupt countries in the
world.“Believe me, most of the senior names in the country have been
responsible for stealing nearly all its wealth,” said Jabouri. “There
are names at the top of the tree who would kill me if I went after them.
When people here steal, they steal openly. They brag about it. There is
a virus here, like Ebola. It is called corruption. There is no hope, I
am sorry to say.”

In its most recent survey, Transparency International ranked Iraq 161
out of 168 countries on the issue of transparency. Why so low? Because
it's so corrupt.

Barham Othman (NRTTV) offers, "Conflict of interest is popular in Iraq in public institutions including
the ministries of natural resources and that has caused corruption.
Conflict of interest has caused corruption in Iraq, but since there is
no rule of law for the action, authorities have taken advantage of the
situation, especially politicians. Iraq after 2003 became a free market
in almost every business sector; that opened lots of paths for foreign
companies to invest in Iraq. People in power took advantage of that,
using their positions for private gains instead of for the public’s
benefit."

The liberation of towns from the Islamic State has had the surprising
effect on my Iraqi friends of making them more despondent than they were
before. When they are asked when things will turn around, they shrug
and say Allah karim, akin to the English expression “when pigs
fly.” Just after Sinjar was “liberated,” one of my former students from
the area sent me pictures of his family’s Friday lunch spread before and
after they devoured it, labeling them Sinjar “before liberation” and
“after liberation.”Iraq is now face to face with the classic “day after” dilemma. Many of its towns are demolished, and there is no money to rebuild.
There is no agreement on which groups should secure and govern the
areas and who gets to go back. The most visceral and volatile barrier is
the newfound distrust among the local populations of liberated areas,
who see one another as collaborators, bystanders, or victims of the Islamic State. Left
unattended, these “day after” dynamics will — and have already — lead to
internecine conflict and political gridlock that will undermine
battlefield victories, similar to what happened in 2010 when the
military successes of the Sunni Sahwa militias, Arabic for “awakening,”
against Al Qaeda in Iraq were squandered due to a lack of lasting
national and local political deals.This is evident in Iraq’s disputed post-Islamic State territories,
where both the Kurdistan Regional Government in Erbil and the Iraqi
federal government in Baghdad feel they have greater claims than ever
before. That leaves them even further from local and national political
deals that would produce lasting peace. Meanwhile, local forces with
varying degrees of loyalty to Baghdad and Erbil have multiplied and
militarized.

The political solution?

The one US President Barack Obama insisted was needed to solve the country's crises?

He began publicly insisting that was needed on June 19, 2014.

But the US State Dept was too busy trying to be the US Defense Dept to
focus on diplomacy, to aid the government of Iraq in coming together, to
reconcile.

February 11th, Haider al-Abadi gave an address via the Iraqi media and declared:Since I was honoured with the responsibility of being Prime Minister,
despite the serious security challenges and [Islamic State] occupation of
one-third of the area of Iraq, we have set within our key objectives,
the economic, financial and administrative reform in the forefront, in
addition to the fight against corruption.

Those are the goals as he sees them.

National reconciliation?

Doesn't even make Haider's list.

Yet the Islamic State would never have gotten a foothold in Iraq were it
not for Nouri al-Maliki's persecution of the Sunni population.

That persecution continues.

Just last week, in liberated Ramadi, Shi'ite militias were blowing up the homes of Sunnis.

And they did that with the Iraqi army watching.

The persecution continues.

And until it's addressed, the Islamic State will continue to remain in Iraq.

That's true no matter how many bombs get dropped on the country.

You want to destroy the Islamic State?

Then you have to address what void it filled.

When the Sunnis were being persecuted, the world turned a blind eye.

That's when the Islamic State stepped forward.

Stop the persecution of the Sunni population in Iraq and there's no
reason for anyone in Iraq to support the Islamic State or any reason for
it to be in the country.

In the US, Senator Johnny Isakson is the Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee. His office notes the following:

WASHINGTON –The Senate Committee on Veterans’
Affairs, chaired by U.S. Senator Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., along with the
House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, are holding series of hearings
with Veterans Service Organizations
(VSOs) to consider their respective legislative priorities for this
year.

The second in the series of VSO hearings will take place
tomorrow,Wednesday, February 24, 2016,
with The American Legion.

The Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs is chaired by U.S. Senator Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., in the 114th Congress.

Isakson
is a veteran himself – having served in the Georgia Air National Guard
from 1966-1972 – and has been a member of the Senate VA Committee since
he joined the Senate in 2005. Isakson’s home
state of Georgia is home to more than a dozen military installations
representing each branch of the military as well as more than 750,000
veterans.